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DESCRIPTION:10/11 Rally-Speak Out At SF Japan Consulate-Abe Government Stop Restarting 
 NUKE Plants and Defend the Children and Families of Fukushima\n\nRally 
 Speak Out\nWed October 11, 2017\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 
 Battery St. near California St.\nSan Francisco\n\nOn Wednesday October 11, 
 2017 at the San Francisco Japanese consulate at 3PM people will join 
 together to call for the halt of the restarting of Japanese nuclear plants. 
 The Abe government despite mass opposition of the majority of people in 
 Japan continues  to push to restarting of nuclear plants. They also 
 continue to demand that refugee children and families return to Fukushima 
 despite the continue dangers of contamination from a contaminated nuclear 
 plant and thousands of tons of radioactive water tanks surround the plant. 
 Another major earthquake could lead to the immediate release in the ocean 
 of this contaminated water. The government which also controls TEPCO is 
 also allowing the gangster Yakuza to subcontract the repair work at the 
 Fukushima plant. These workers who are day laborers and migrant workers 
 have not had proper education or training and after their use they are 
 dumped by the government.\nIt is important that people in the United States 
 also continue to join the Japanese people who are also organizing against 
 these Abe policies\nThe government has also passed a “secrecy law” and 
 “conspiracy law” that threatens the rights of journalists and citizens 
 to release information about the continuing danger of nuclear was. The 
 government is also seeking to repeal Article 9 which prohibits offensive 
 war.  The militarization of Japan is a threat to all people of Asia and the 
 world.\n\nMake sure your voice be heard.\n\n\nSpeak Out and Rally initiated 
 by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\n\n\nJapan Tepco again 
 ordered to pay damages over nuclear disaster but claims against state 
 dismissed\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/09/22/national/crime-legal/tepco-ordered-pay-damages-nuclear-disaster-claims-state-dismissed/#.WcXbCxTD2-Q\nKYODO\nSEP 
 22, 2017\nCHIBA – Chiba District Court on Friday ordered Tokyo Electric 
 to pay damages over the Fukushima nuclear disaster but dismissed claims 
 against the state.\nIt is the second time a court has ruled against Tokyo 
 Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. in a suit filed by residents forced to 
 abandon their homes when three reactor cores melted following the deadly 
 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which knocked out their cooling systems.\nThe 
 triple meltdown spewed massive amounts of radioactive material into the 
 air.\nThe Chiba District Court awarded ¥376 million to 42 of the 45 
 plaintiffs who fled Fukushima Prefecture for Chiba Prefecture and filed the 
 suit in March 2013, seeking around ¥2.8 billion in damages from the 
 government and Tepco.\nThe focal point of the Chiba case was whether the 
 government and Tepco were able to foresee the huge tsunami that hit the 
 seaside plant on March 11, 2011, and take preventive measures beforehand. 
 Conflicting claims were made by the parties regarding the government’s 
 long-term earthquake assessment, which was made public in 2002.\nThe 
 assessment, made by the earthquake research promotion unit, predicted a 20 
 percent chance of a magnitude 8 earthquake occurring along the Japan Trench 
 in the Pacific Ocean, including the area off Fukushima, within 30 
 years.\nBased on the assessment, the plaintiffs argued that, with the plant 
 standing on ground roughly 10 meters above sea level, a tsunami higher than 
 that level striking the plant could have been predicted.\nThey claimed the 
 disaster was therefore preventable by placing emergency generators on 
 higher ground, and that the government should have made Tepco take such 
 measures by exercising its regulatory powers.\nThe government and Tepco, 
 for their part, claimed the assessment was not established knowledge, and 
 that even if they had foreseen a tsunami higher than the elevation of the 
 plant and taken measures against it, they cannot be held liable as the 
 actual tsunami was much higher, at around 15.5 meters.\nThe government also 
 argued that it obtained regulatory powers to force Tepco to take 
 anti-flooding measures only after a legislative change following the 
 disaster.\nIn Friday’s ruling, the court found the state not liable, 
 saying that while the government indeed has such powers, not exercising 
 them was not too unreasonable.\nThe Chiba case is among around 30 similar 
 lawsuits brought by groups of people forced to evacuate by the nuclear 
 disaster.\nIn March, the Maebashi District Court in Gunma recognized 
 negligence on the part of not just Tepco, but also the government, saying 
 they were able to foresee a tsunami high enough to inundate the plant.\nAt 
 the time, it was the first such ruling issued among around 30 similar suits 
 and the first to rule in favor of plaintiffs.\nThe Maebashi court 
 acknowledged the state had regulatory authority over Tepco even before 
 3/11, noting that “failing to exercise it is strikingly irrational and 
 illegal.”\nBut because the court awarded to 62 of 137 plaintiffs a total 
 of ¥38.55 million in damages — far less than the ¥1.5 billion sought in 
 total — many of the plaintiffs have appealed the district court 
 decision.\nIn the Chiba suit, the 45 plaintiffs, including four who 
 evacuated voluntarily, sought ¥20 million each in compensation for their 
 evacuations and the loss of their hometowns, jobs and personal 
 relationships because their lives were uprooted.\nThe magnitude 9.0 
 earthquake and ensuing tsunami struck northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011, 
 causing multiple meltdowns and hydrogen blasts at the nuclear plant.\nAs of 
 the end of August 2017, around 55,000 people who lived in Fukushima 
 Prefecture at the time of the disaster remained at the locations where they 
 evacuated, both within and outside the prefecture.\n\nLawsuit filed over 
 kidney disease patient’s death blamed on nuclear 
 accident\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/10/03/national/crime-legal/lawsuit-filed-kidney-disease-patients-death-blamed-nuclear-accident/#.WdRaoRTD2-Q\nJIJI\nOCT 
 3, 2017\n\n\nThe daughter of a man who died of kidney disease after the 
 March 2011 meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant filed a 
 lawsuit Tuesday seeking ¥31 million in damages from Tokyo Electric Power 
 Company Holdings Inc.\nThe 69-year-old female plaintiff claims that the 
 accident prevented her 88-year-old father, a resident of Hirono, Fukushima 
 Prefecture, from getting proper treatment for his disease.\n“My father 
 would have lived longer without the accident,” the daughter, Emiko Endo, 
 told a news conference.\nThe father, Makoto, was forced to evacuate to 
 Tokyo from his hospital in the Fukushima city of Iwaki so he could continue 
 his dialysis treatments, according to her complaint filed with the Tokyo 
 District Court.\nHe died in April 2011 after his health condition 
 deteriorated.\nTepco said it will respond to the matter sincerely.\n\nJapan 
 NRA approves safety measures at TEPCO plant in 
 Niigata\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201710040031.html\nBy MASANOBU 
 HIGASHIYAMA/ Staff Writer\nOctober 4, 2017 at 16:10 JST\n\nJapan’s 
 nuclear watchdog on Oct. 4 approved Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s safety 
 measures taken to restart two reactors in Niigata Prefecture, the first 
 such approval for the company since the Fukushima nuclear disaster 
 unfolded.\n\nThe Nuclear Regulation Authority confirmed the results of its 
 screening on the technological aspects of the No. 6 and No. 7 reactors that 
 TEPCO wants to bring online at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant.\n\nIt 
 was also the first time for the NRA to conclude that boiling-water 
 reactors, the same type as those at TEPCO’s crippled Fukushima No. 1 
 nuclear plant, met the new safety standards adopted after the meltdowns at 
 the plant in 2011.\n\nThe NRA plans to hear opinions from the public about 
 its judgment for 30 days before deciding on whether to make the approval 
 official. It will also solicit the views of the minister of economy, trade 
 and industry.\n\nAs one condition for official approval, the NRA is 
 requiring the industry minister to oversee the utility’s management 
 policy concerning its initiative and responsibility for work to 
 decommission the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant.\n\nFrom now, the NRA will 
 check equipment designs and security regulations, including how TEPCO will 
 guarantee its promise that its priority is on safety, not economic 
 benefits.\n\nThe NRA’s screening process at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa 
 nuclear plant went beyond checking technological aspects of TEPCO’s 
 safety measures. Given TEPCO’s history of mistakes and blunders, NRA 
 members also discussed whether the utility was even eligible to operate 
 nuclear power plants.\n\nIn response to the NRA’s demands that TEPCO take 
 full responsibility for decommissioning the Fukushima No. 1 plant, the 
 utility in late August stressed that its stance of putting importance on 
 safety is “a promise to the people.”\n\nThe NRA then approved TEPCO’s 
 eligibility but attached some conditions.\n\nIn late September, however, it 
 came to light that workers at the Fukushima No. 1 plant were erroneously 
 setting water gauges to measure groundwater levels of wells around reactor 
 buildings, which could cause leaks of highly contaminated water to the 
 outside water.\n\nInspectors will face a formidable challenge in judging 
 individual issues facing TEPCO based on security regulations.\n\nHowever, 
 even if TEPCO passes all of the screenings, it must win the consent of 
 local governments to restart the reactors at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear 
 plant.\n\nNiigata Governor Ryuichi Yoneyama has said that he will wait for 
 three or four years to make decision on the restarts, until his prefectural 
 government completes its own investigation into the cause of the 2011 
 nuclear disaster at the Fukushima No. 1 plant.\n\n\n\nCorrupt Abe 
 Government Used Yakuza In Fukushima Decontamination Racket\nJapanese Yakuza 
 arrested in Fukushima decontamination work 
 racket\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201709280045.html\nBy KENTA 
 YASUMI/ Staff Writer\nSeptember 28, 2017 at 18:40 JST\n\nBags containing 
 debris from decontamination work are piled up in a tentative storing site 
 in Naraha, Fukushima Prefecture. The location pictured is not where the 
 workers in the article were operating. (Asahi Shimbuin file photo)\nThree 
 men, including a yakuza gang boss affiliated with Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan’s 
 largest crime syndicate, have been arrested on suspicion of illegally 
 supplying workers for government-commissioned decontamination work related 
 to the 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant accident.\n\nThe three are yakuza 
 group leader Hidenobu Maruta, 48, of Tokyo’s Katsushika Ward, 
 construction company executive Shigeki Yamamura, 59, of Koriyama, Fukushima 
 Prefecture, and Akio Kitano, 51, an unemployed resident of Saitama, Tokyo 
 police announced Sept. 27.\n\nAll three deny the allegations of employment 
 brokering without a license, a violation of the Employment Security Law, 
 and intermediate exploitation, which is banned under the Labor Standards 
 Law.\n\nMaruta and Yamamura are accused of supplying two workers from 
 January 2015 to March 2016 to a sub-subcontractor who carries out 
 decontamination operations for the government project, and receiving 
 160,000 yen ($1,430) together in commission without consent from the labor 
 ministry.\n\nThe cleanup work was conducted in Tomioka, Fukushima 
 Prefecture.\n\nMaruta and Kitano are suspected of taking commission 
 amounting to about 920,000 yen from the wages of those two workers, 
 according to the police department in charge of organized crime.\n\nThe 
 three suspects are said to have shared cut of 2,000 yen to 3,000 yen from 
 each of the workers’ 16,000-yen daily wage.\n\nFurther to the 
 exploitation of the aforementioned two workers, the suspects are believed 
 to have received about 10 million yen collectively through brokering about 
 10 other workers to the sub-subcontractor.3\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/10/08/18803514.php
SUMMARY:Rally-Speak Out At SF Japan Consulate-Abe Government Stop Restarting NUKE Plants
LOCATION:275 Battery St. Near California St.\nSan Francisco, Cal
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/10/08/18803514.php
DTSTART:20171011T220000Z
DTEND:20171011T230000Z
END:VEVENT
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